14-8 Total Recall This Fujica Single-8 Instant Load camera has a photographic "memory". It records what you see just as you see it. Clear, bright, true-to-life. Unique features not found in any other instant load movie system make this pos- sible. The camera has a built-in pressure plate You have nothing to do with it . . . but it does something important for you . . . automatically locks the film flat behind the lens to give you the sharpest movies you've ever seen outside a theatre screen. Even if you've never taken a movie before, you get professional results easily. Drop in cartridge... aim. . . shoot! A full 50 continuous feet if you wish with no film flipover. Zoom in or zoom out! Fully automatic electric eye sets correct expo- sure Reflex lens gets you exactly what you see. Less than $125 Other Fujica Single-8s less than $80. . . at camera stores or write for the colorful facts. .1'r.lm. FUJI PHOTO FILM U.S.A., Inc. U.S. Distributor: Ehrenreich Photo-Optical Industries, Inc., Garden City, N. Y. 11530 In Canada: R. & H. Products, Ltd. FU.JIC INSTANT LOAD C Single-8 ) Reflex Zoom P-300 ... , , #' . ':--:-" .. '-' '-" oQo . ". ." ....J'NooQo ' '\ ; '\':" 4 i .$ . '" ..,. \. .,> : . ff:::, ':: 1t · ... :!- .....:. ÞÙ"...(' y f -" . .'< ".-:-:- , ,.' :_- .;: of' ,"f" if '>, y ' ,- r& Þ. t\ ......;... .... .:..... .:..... "'::::: :: "> .:: :--: --:::ðt-::'.,. - - 4 j .: ...-:t . -:::- :p,'\ public's respect and the President's at- . " tf' n non. . . . It was an interesting speech, prImari- ly because it showed Nixon trying to move from politics to statesmanship. Nothing that he said about the Presi- dèncy had not been said by others, and some of what he proposed as novel and promIsing seemed to be neither. Most headline writers, for example, sIngled out his assertion that in a Nixon Ad- rninistration "dissent" would be heard. "\\1 e should bring dissenters into policy discussions, not freeze them out," he sctid. 13ut almost every President of recent times, including Lyndon John- son, has done this, and as often as not- as James C. Thomson, Jr., a former staff member of the National Secunty Council, con tended in the Atlantic MonthLy a few months ago-the dis- senters who have been brought into "poJicy discussions" have found them- selves merely strengthening the bureauc- racy in its determination to proceed with the policies under criticism. Some government officials may be persuaded b} the dissenters and join theÏ1 ranks, but the general rule seems to be that most are fortified in their self-righteous- ness by having performed the virtuous act of lending an ear to their critics. Nixon's commitment to some kind of national, or coalition, government may portend a serious effort to restore at least political unity Given our political system, though, it is hard even to imagine how such a government could be constructed. Dwight Eisenhower had a tr) at innovation when he made a Democratic union leader his Secretary of L'abor, but the arrangement lasted less than a year and was accounted a mistake by all involved. John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson have been served by a number of marginal Republicans- most notably, Douglas Dillon and Rob- ert McNamara-but if some of their records hå ve been distinguished in ad- tninistrative terms, theÏ1 presence in the government contributed nothing at all to unity. If what Nixon has in mind is some kind of diffusion of executive power along the lines suggested by Senator McCarthy-the institutionali- zation of dissent by the recruitment of spokesmen for mInority interests pow- erful enough not to be overridden by concurrent majorities-he n1ay be on to something new not only in .Ameri- can polItical history but in politIcal the- ory. This always seemed the most dubi- ous of McCarthy's proposals, but at least McCarthy coupled it with a con- cept of the Presidency very different from the "activist" one that Nixon no\ ! contends is his A government of activ- SEPTEMDER 2. 8, , 9 b 8 . . I . . , THOROUGHBRED RACING AT ITS BEST FIRST RACE 1 :30 SEPT. 16-0CT. 26 ... f - ,j'.": .''V: ij;' y . ".(: ": --Þ- . :>:( . "= o "Y Ø"' "":.> ... ----a ß ",:,> ':<"".. J' -::-... ...' ,/'- ,,,", '::-:.' .. '. , 4 -?, '^oN ",' .: N ". ' % 1 : /h' >} . , .f .'*' . ,.>>^ .ýf "'4- .. t . -i' f : .' - .,:.:, 1 j .- "(0. ":. ! "*'" ,'., ., .: ;..: ....<"': ":;.... '<< :::: / ... .. :.. . ) -0::'.$ . "':'.:' :.:.:. 2 ,:/::.... f / -= ,. k <'.N. . '-"" .' 00&.- ',,:' * CALL 641-4700 EXT 306 FOR INFORMATION _ for Horse lovers '" '1 FOX-HANDLE K PEWTER TANKARDS $10 50 each ,.. JIr" .. 61/2 inches high, glass bottom A distinguished gift. Up to three initials for the personal touch, $3 additional. Please PRI NT clearly. Send 25C for Horseman s k u and O , S (212) MU 4-6060 FREE PARklNC Dept. NY, 141 East 24 St. N.Y. 10010 $:X" <<, ........-w " .". '1(00, . ,/;-.', .". ... N :<>\,i <- oW "3It.< 'f\ %Þ-.f p'< : t , !:: v ñ"< ..::;" / " . :::-:: :.:.: '" ...., . <' 4:ií1 ..;u' ^ : . 4,.:" :::... ^""<:--,. . ?: ..y"y .....< : :.' ,:.. v.... .::: :.:.:.".:.:.. "BIANCA" (commissioned by Mrs. H. L. Browning, Dallas, Texas) Sculpture portraIt of your own dog from you r photos - or life Done in solId walnut, natu ral finl h or painted to show markings and color. Pr ce based on size and pose desired Send photos for exact quotation. Catalog of sculpture - dogs, horses birds $1.00 M. E. Brasher (24th year specia:izing in animal sculpture) Dept NY 928 ChIckadee Valley, Route 341 Kent, Connecticut 06757